FEATURED ARTICLES ABOUT PENGUIN GROUP - PAGE 5

(Reuters) - Apple Inc CEO Tim Cook could be deposed in the government's lawsuit against the company over alleged price-setting in the e-book market. In a one-page order, U.S. District Judge Denise Cote on Friday said she will hold a telephone conference on March 13 to consider the government's request for Cook's testimony. (http://r.reuters.com/xur56t) Apple is the sole remaining defendant in the lawsuit brought against the iPhone maker and five other publishers last April for allegedly conspiring to raise prices of e-books to challenge the dominance of Amazon.com Inc. All of the accused publishers, including Pearson Plc's Penguin Group, News Corp's HarperCollins Publishers Inc and CBS Corp-owned Simon & Schuster Inc, have already settled with Justice Department in the course of the last year.

In Cold Blood By Truman Capote, read by Scott Brick Random House Audio When an unsolved crime finally appears to be cracked, as the JonBenet Ramsey case recently seemed to be, the public's excitement is palpable. There's just something about true crime that gets the imagination roaring, and audiobooks, so like ghost stories, are the perfect medium to rehash the details of creepy true tales. Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood," the story of two criminals who murdered a popular Kansas family, has long been considered the exemplary forerunner of the genre's modern novelistic stylings.

The Mistress's Daughter By A.M. Homes, read by Jane Adams Penguin Group Forget those droopy old chrysanthemums -- this year, pick up an audiobook for your mom that reflects her particular style of mothering. Actually, considering that literature is rife with some wacky moms, you may not want to suggest any comparisons. A.M. Homes' new memoir details what happened when her biological mother came looking for her 30-some years after giving her up for adoption. For the novelist, going from not knowing anything about her roots to meeting both parents and learning about the circumstances of her birth was a strange journey indeed.

For years, experts have said what's good for the heart is good for the head. Now, a new statement from the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association underlines the findings that the same plaque buildup in the arteries that causes heart disease can also impact the brain. "The heart and brain are linked by arteries that supply blood, oxygen and nutrients," says Philip B. Gorelick, M.D., M.P.H., director of the Center for Stroke Research at the University of Illinois College of Medicine.

As a child growing up in Round Lake Beach during the late 1940s and '50s, Ralph Davis had some part-time neighbors in Chicagoans who spent summers in the place he called home but returned to their city homes when the warm weather faded. Those days are long gone, the victim of suburban sprawl. New homes are sprouting everywhere, and Round Lake Beach and the neighboring villages of Round Lake, Round Lake Heights and Round Lake Park are no exception. Round Lake Beach, for instance, was once a summer retreat; now, it is a full-fledged bedroom community.